Topic: NEWS

Defending Mother Earth: A Blue Print For All Life Species in North America

by Dr. John Bacher and Danny Beaton, Turtle Clan Mohawk [www.dannybeaton.ca]

On June 17th, 2015 Dr. Reed Noss, Professor of Conservation Biology at the University of Florida, the author of seven books and 304 articles, gave an impassioned talk in the Debates Room of the University of Toronto’s Hart House. Noss spoke on the need to rescue and connect natural habitats before they are chopped up by urban sprawl. Isolated habitat islands are becoming “biological sinks”: leading to species extirpation and extinction.

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Reed Noss Environmentalist and Danny Beaton Mohawk Clan. Photo by Andrew McCammon.

Noss was introduced by Shelly Petrie, Program Director of the Greenbelt Foundation. She stressed his rescue of the Oak Ridges Moraine and the Niagara Escarpment from development cuts.

Noss exploded debate through maps. These indicate areas that should be “re-wilded”, (meaning restored to natural habitat). During the late 1980s his dissertation supervisor, told him, “Don’t publish these maps.” Noss gleefully recalled how, “I did publish the maps, and they soon dominated the front pages of Florida’s newspapers. “

Noss finds that, “There are a minority of around twenty-five per cent of the population who disagree with the natural areas networks the maps propose. They attempt to use the maps to organize opposition to conservation. They do not however, succeed in changing public opinion. Most people are inspired by maps that show more wild lands”.

Noss recalled how, “For twenty-five years Florida funded land acquisition based on the corridor concept at a guaranteed level of $350 million annually. This continued until the last six years. It only ended because of the domination of state politics in Florida by the factional group known as the Tea Party. The majority of the population however, do not support the Tea Party’s antics. This was shown by a successful referendum for an amendment to the Florida state constitution to restore funding for the acquisition of natural areas. “

Although retarded by the Tea Party, Noss’ efforts during the quarter-century that they were funded in Florida have had a major impact on rescuing critical threatened species, notably the Cougar and the Black Bear. Before the program began to have an impact in the 1990s the Florida Panther, ( a popular name for the American Cougar in Florida), was on the verge of extirpation. Since they were trapped in a few protected areas such as Everglades National Park, the Cougars were suffering from genetic uniformity, causing a high rate of mortality from heart disease.

In response to the Cougars’ plight Noss soon showed the importance of the new scientific discipline he leads so ably, Conservation Biology. Cougars from Texas were brought in to increase genetic diversity in the population. This was combined over the a quarter century with an aggressive program of purchase of habitat including linkages that allow the Cougars to expand their range northwards. Noss told the wowed audience, “We are seeing increasingly the success of the network of corridors stretching northwards from the Everglades. Cougars are expanding .their range to where they were displaced in the past. We are increasingly seeing Cougars from the Everglades roaming north to Georgia.”

While Noss told the Hart House assembly that the Ontario Greenbelt’s connected corridors of natural habitats resembles the system built up in Florida over the past thirty years, the province has not adopted Florida’s efforts to build wildlife crossings to reduce road mortality. Some of the most significant photographs he displayed were of underpasses in Florida to encourage Cougars and Black Bears to move safely under highways. These he stressed have been monitored and are being used successfully. Another contrast to Ontario came out in his description of the community where he lives, which is organized to help wildlife move through it. Unlike Newmarket where bears are shot, it is honoured to have a few passing through annually.

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Georgian Bay, Ontario. Photo by Danny Beaton.

Noss is pessimistic about improving wildlife habitat west of the Niagara Escarpment. “I have been to Rondeau and Pelee parks, but I don’t see great opportunities for linking and expanding habitats there.” While in the rest of southern Ontario he uses larger species such as Moose and Deer to expand ranges through corridors and bigger habitat tracts, here he see micro scale strategies for limited ranges species such as Blanding’s Turtle.

Noss’ pessimism about the corn belt illustrates the limitations of efforts to improve the environment which do not attempt to mobilize native communities and their treaty rights. This situation is most evident in the part of Ontario with the least natural habitat, Chatham-Kent. (former Kent County) It has only 4.5 per cent of its landscape in forest cover. This is rapidly shrinking as corn prices soar and trees are razed.

Much of the tiny area remaining in forest cover in Chatham-Kent is found on the predominately forested 13 square kilometre reserve of the Moravian of the Thames First Nation. The community’s leader, Chief Greg Peters has termed the situation an affront to their “aboriginal right to hunt and fish”, since wildlife cannot survive where there are no forests. He has also attributed deforestation to the siltation of the Thames River, which kills fish.

It is to be hoped that Noss’ ideas will be strengthened by work with native communities, using treaty rights to restore a degraded landscape. In such a situation moose might again swim in the Thames River. It flows through a landscape which ecologist Thomas Beaton, has found contributes to “the highest rates of hospitalization due to cardiovascular disease, stroke and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease” in Ontario.

Danny Beaton says, “When we destroy Mother Earth we destroy ourselves. We humans have the Sacred Duty to be a voice for all life Species, so that means we are the voice for the Cougar, we are the voice for the Bear, the Turtle, moose, deer and everything that moves on this Sacred Mother Earth. We are the voice for plant life, the rivers, lakes and great oceans.”

Native Rights And Forests Chewed Into Dust

I was moved to hear in the longhouse of the Six Nations Confederacy an effort by the revered Cayuga environmentalist, the late Norm Jacobs, to have the courts defend treaties and the land. He explained that if treaties that protect the land are not enforced, Native rights will simply be ground into the dust by those who seek to exploit our traditional territories for profit.

During the last days of the deep cold winter of 2015, one of the worst examples I have seen of Jacobs’ warnings took place. Fifty acres of forest were ground into sawdust in defiance of our treaties that seek to defend the land. A great refuge for deer and their natural predators, the coyote, in the heart of the built up area of greater Toronto was chewed into a mess by chipping machines. Trees that were donated by Ontario government nurseries for reforestation became sawdust for the schemes of a development company: Corsica Developments.

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Author Danny Beaton (second from left) protesting the desecration of the Dunlap Forest.

What makes the devastation so insulting to the good mind of traditional people is that the fifty acre forest to be razed (about half of a larger woodland slightly over one hundred acres, which may be later cut up for turf playgrounds) was created in order to compensate for some of the damage done by “pioneer” invaders of the land. Their greed saw the forest burned down to clear farms and to obtain quick cash for potash used to manufacture soap. The Oak Ridges Moraine just north of this forest was turned into a desert wasteland, and blowing sands threatened to bury Toronto. At the same time, the rivers that flowed into Toronto (notably the Don, which has its headwaters close to these lands) experienced massive floods. This led to 88 deaths in November, 1954 from Hurricane Hazel. For this reason, under the leadership of visionary astronomers such as Clarence Chant who used the restored forest as a barrier from light pollution from the newly built David Dunlap Observatory (where black holes were discovered), the site was gradually reforested from 1939 to 1980.

An environmental protection group, the Richmond Hill Naturalists, whose existence is now threatened by demands for an award of costs by the developer, went through three hearings to defend the land. This lead to a bill for expert witnesses fees and lawyers in excess of $500,000. At the most significant of these hearings, one by the Ontario Municipal Board (OMB) on zoning, the Native band that considers these lands part of their traditional territory attempted to become a party to the hearing.

On July 21, 2013, Karlene J. Hussey (a Vice Chair of the OMB) issued a ruling that assaulted Native rights and ultimately doomed the land. In her decision, which put a residential official plan designation on close to fifty acres of forest, Hussey denied a request by Carol King, the authorized representative of the Mississaugas of the New Credit. King’s request sought an adjournment of the hearing on an “urgent basis,” so that the band would have time to develop a case to defend the threatened forest.

Hussey rejected the Mississaugas’ plea for the earth on the basis that it was “prejudicial” to the interests of Corsica. She also told the band to involve itself in the later “proper process associated with the zoning amendment necessary to implement this development.”

How Hussey cunningly misdirected the Ojibway nation to a dead end is seen by the subsequent decision regarding the zoning amendment. This was issued by OMB hearing officer J. E. Snienek on December 11, 2014, shortly after a protest walk around the perimeter of the threatened forest by the Toronto Field Naturalists.

In his decision, Snienek argued that no matter how compelling the testimony was from the various expert witnesses he heard who argued that more forest should be saved, it was all worthless. He ruled that the issue of forest protection had been decided by Hussey’s hearing and that further efforts to save it constituted inappropriate “re-litigation.” It is on this basis that the zoning hearings were irrelevant, and Corsica is attempting to recover $200,000 in legal costs from the Richmond Hill Naturalists. If even a small portion of these costs were awarded by the OMB, the organization that was worked for a half a century to protect the environment in Richmond Hill would be forced to disband.

In Hussey’s hearing, the naturalists hired an archeological expert to present testimony about traditional Native use of the land. This report was never defended by the expert witness, on the basis of the decision of the Naturalists’ legal counsel. Also barred from the OMB was a lengthy report by historian Dr. John Bacher, PhD. He is the author of the history of reforestation in Ontario: Two Billion Trees and Counting: the Legacy of Edmund Zavitz.

In his barred report, Bacher wrote that the David Dunlap Forest was one “of the most successful examples of an ecologically restored landscape” north of Toronto and south of the Oak Ridges Moraine. He explained, “Today, it is very important that historically, as well as functionally, this site remains as a legacy to the past and a reminder to our future of the importance to protect watersheds and give us all the benefits that trees bring to our communities.” To prepare his anticipated testimony, Bacher visited Boston to view the Arnold Arboretum, a forested park that provided the model for the creation of the David Dunlap Forest. He found it was part of a “chain of parks whose principal goal was pollution control through a network of settling ponds and constructed wetlands similar to innovative conservationist thinking today.”

Shortly after the barring of Bacher’s testimony, a massive flood of the Don River hit Toronto. Although past reforestation such as that of the Dunlap Forest helped to diminish floods by increasing forest cover, this wise legacy of the past is being undermined by spectacles such as the Richmond Hill chipper massacre. With the disruptions caused by climate change, the earth is posed to take a horrible flooding revenge for the destruction of one of Canada’s biggest urban forests.

~ Danny Beaton, Turtle Clan Mohawk [www.dannybeaton.ca]

Rachel Notley And Alberta’s NDP Win Election In Historic Landslide

After 44 years of Progressive Conservative Alberta governments, the NDP’s charismatic Rachel Notley made history by winning May 5th’s provincial election in a landslide victory. “I think we might have made a little bit of history tonight,” she said as her supporters cheered. “Friends, I believe change has finally come to Alberta.”

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Rachel Notley And Alberta’s NDP Win Election In Historic Landslide

Notley’s NDP had won 54 of the province’s 87 seats, giving her a majority government. “I am deeply humbled, and I want to pledge to you, the people of Alberta, that we will work every day to earn your trust,” Notley said. “It’s been said before and it’s true, you can’t go wrong if you stay with the values and common sense of Albertans.” Notley stated that her party give Albertans a voice at the table. The NDP campaign promised higher taxes on corporations and a reversal of the PC’s cuts to healthcare and education. Addressing the business community, she said, “To Alberta’s job creators, great and small in the energy sector and every other sector, our government will be a good partner and we will work with you to grow our economy and to secure a more prosperous future for every Albertan in every community.” She stated, “We need finally to end the boom and bust rollercoaster we have been riding on. Our government will be a good partner and we will work with you to grow our economy and secure a more prosperous future for every Albertan in every community.”

The Tory collapse that took place on election day was unexpected. The PCs were reduced to less that a dozen seats in the Alberta Legislature. After seven months since he took the reins of the PC empire, Jim Prentice calmly took the stage at the downtown Calgary Metropolitan Centre and announced his immediate resignation. “Though I am personally saddened by the decision, the voters are always right in our democracy, and so it is this evening,” Prentice told the party faithful. “I share your disappointment, and I also accept responsibility for the decision that led up to this evening.”

“I’ve been a member of this party since I was a young man and I share your disappointment,” said Prentice. “As the leader of the party, I take responsibility for the decisions that led up to this evening. Clearly my contribution to public life has come to an end. It is time for me to dedicate my time to the other responsibilities I have as a husband, a father, and a grandfather.” Prentice immediately relinquished his post as MLA for Calgary-Foothills after being elected there.

Notley ran her campaign by telling people that Albertans are going to come first, corporations haven’t been paying their fair share, and the NDP will no longer let them get away with that. Wildrose Leader Brian Jean also won his seat in Fort McMurray-Conklin. “We were a very effective opposition,” he said. “The most effective opposition in Alberta’s history, and starting tomorrow, we’re going to show Rachel Notley a little bit of that opposition,” he said. Alberta Liberal Leader David Swann closed his speech by cheering for the Calgary Flames, still in the playoffs at the time, and Alberta Party Leader Greg Clark also won his seat.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper congratulated the Premier-Elect on her victory. “I look forward to working with future Premier Notley on issues of importance for Albertans and all Canadians, including creating jobs, economic growth and long-term prosperity across the province and country,” he said in a statement the next morning. He also thanked Prentice, a former minister in his cabinet, for his service.

Rachel Notley’s NDP promised to back a national inquiry into missing and murdered Aboriginal women and girls, and include the study of Aboriginal culture and history in provincial schools.

An historically high number of First Nations, Metis and Inuit Albertans voted in the election, according to a sample from Elections Alberta, with many claiming they cast their vote for Rachel Notley’s NDP. For the first time in Alberta’s history, Aboriginal peoples were acknowledged in a premier-elect’s victory speech. “To Alberta’s indigenous peoples, the trust that we have been given tonight is a call to be better neighbours and better partners,” Notley said. “And I am looking forward to consulting with you and learning from you.” Notley committed to a renewed partnership with Alberta’s Aboriginal peoples during the campaign, promising to implement the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples and make it law in Alberta, in addition to solving land claims and addressing consultation issues.

APTN Hosts 2015 Aboriginal Day Celebrations In Edmonton and Winnipeg

APTN Graphic_May2015Each year, APTN travels to a new city to celebrate National Aboriginal Day with the residents of the region and province. For the 9th annual celebration, APTN will bring the largest event of its kind in Canada to Edmonton’s Louise McKinney Riverfront Park in Alberta and The Forks in Winnipeg, Manitoba on Saturday, June 20, 2015. APTN will also broadcast the event nationwide via radio and the internet, and the Aboriginal Day Live concerts will broadcast live on APTN and APTN HD.

To welcome the summer solstice and setting sun, the parties kick off at 11 AM (CT) in Winnipeg and 12 Noon in Edmonton (MT) with entertainment all day, a three-hour twin-stage concert in the evening, and a fireworks finale to finish off the festivities. Free and fun activities will be available for the whole family, including music and dance performances, food sampling, traditional demonstrations, children’s activities, and much more. Select regional Aboriginal artisans will be offering hand-crafted creations for sale, and locally-sourced food trucks and vendors will be onsite with fare to nourish all tastes.

Spirits will be lifted, souls will be moved, and toes and feet will be tapping to the beats throughout the day. At both locations, a Celebration Stage will shine a spotlight on talented First Nations, Inuit, and Métis performers from across the country, highlighting their unique cultures. From jigging to hoop dancing to singing, drumming, and fiddling, you are sure to be entertained! The twin-stage Aboriginal Day Live concert and APTN broadcast begins at 6:30 PM (MT) in Edmonton, 7:30 PM (CT) in Winnipeg.

Visit ATPN online [http://www.aboriginaldaylive.ca] and follow ATPN social media on Facebook and Twitter for the latest information.


WINNIPEG CELEBRATION at THE FORKS

Saturday, June 20, 2015

11:00 AM – 11:30 PM Central Time

http://www.aboriginaldaylive.ca/winnipeg/

COMPETITION POW WOW     1:00 PM – 6:00 PM Central Time
Brought To You By APTN And Manito Ahbee Festival. Grand Entry starts at 1:00 PM.

SKATEBOARD DEMO and COMPETITION     1:00 PM – 6:00 PM Central Time
In Partnership With RHYTHM 104.7 And Sk8 Skates

WINNIPEG LIVE CONCERT (Main Stage)     7:30 PM – 11:30 PM Central Time
Co-hosted by Tina Keeper, star of Cashing In, with Kyle Nobess, star of Mohawk Girls.

  • Andy Desjarlais Tribute performed by Patti Kusturok (Master Fiddler)
  • Brett Kissel (Canadian Country)
  • Don Amero (Singer, Guitarist, Storyteller)
  • Federal Lights (Alternative Pop)
  • Lightning Cloud (Hip Hop/Electronic Trap)
  • marijosée (Franco Pop/World Beat)
  • Mike Bone (Hip Hop)
  • Shayne and Taylor May (Alternative Rock)

FIREWORKS     11:30 PM Central Time


EDMONTON CELEBRATION at LOUISE MCKINNEY PARK

Saturday, June 20, 2015

12:00 NOON – 10:30 PM Mountain Time

http://www.aboriginaldaylive.ca/edmonton/

Edmonton LIVE Concert (Main Stage)     6:30 PM – 10:30 PM Mountain Time
Co-hosted by Michelle Thrush, star of Blackstone, and Don Kelly, star of Fish Out of Water.

  • Crystal Shawanda (Roots/Blues/Americana)
  • Derek Miller (Blues)
  • Ghostkeeper (Blues-Pop)
  • Leanne Goose (Country/Blues)
  • Murray Porter (Blues/Country Piano Master)
  • Nathan Cunningham (Country)
  • Northern Cree Singers (Singing, Traditional Drums)

FIREWORKS     10:30 PM Mountain Time

 

 

 

Siksika Hockey Player Plays In The National Telus Cup

For the first time in their team’s history, the Strathmore UFA Bisons are headed to the Telus Nationals Midget Triple A Hockey Championships. The Bisons were chosen at a training camp last September, the best players included 16-year-old Trygve Many Guns of the Siksika Nation. Along the road to the Telus National Cup, the Bisons won five series against the Calgary Flames midget team 2-0, Calgary Royals 3-0, Calgary Buffaloes, Edmonton CAC 3-2, and the Pacific Regional Championship series 2-0 against the Vancouver N.E. Chiefs. At the UBC Thunderbird Arena in Vancouver, I watched the Bisons sweep the N.E. Chiefs in two games by the scores of 4-2 and 5-0.

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Strathmore UFA Bisons—2015 Pacific Regional Champions. The Bisons now represent Team Alberta at the Telus Cup National Midget Hockey Championships.

The Bisons will represent Alberta at the national midget hockey championships and head coach Dan Macdonald says he’s very optimistic that his team will deliver. “Alberta is usually in the medals along with Saskatchewan and Quebec, but it all depends on the year,” MacDonald said. “We have a legitimate shot at winning the nationals because these players deserve everything they are getting. I told them at the beginning of the season they’re just as good, if not better than other teams, and they can be champions!”

Coach MacDonald talked about their success against the Vancouver Chiefs in the Pacific Regionals. “We wanted to control the puck by pressuring their defence so they were hurried and would make mistakes. Also we wanted to check them throughout the two games when in possession of the puck and take it to the net to create chances,” The coach continued, “We move the puck quickly up the ice to play fast and confuse the opposition, we’ve done this all year and it gives us a greater chance of being in possession of the puck more time to make plays and create more scoring chances.” Leading the Bisons in playoff points are Barrett Sheen and Kyle Gordon, tied with 21 points, and Gary Haden with 20 points.

Jamie Jackson, Vancouver N.E. Chiefs head coach praised the Strathmore Bisons for their offensive pressure in both games, as well as their defence. “I would give a lot of of credit to Bisons’ defence and goaltending. We have been able to expose the weakness in a team’s defence all season,” coach Jackson said. “The size and skating ability of the team’s defence in combination with more size and speed on the back made it difficult for us to get speed in transition. Once we got below the Bisons’ goal line, we were able to sustain some offence and get the chances we were looking for.”

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2015 Pacific Regional Midget Hockey Champion Trygve Many Guns of the Siksika Nation will play in the Telus National Cup with Strathmore UFA Bisons.

Coach Macloed talked about the only First Nations player on the Bisons, Trygve Many Guns of the Siksika Nation wearing number 13. “Trygve Many Guns is a power forward who is very good in the offensive zone. Offensively, he drives the net and with his size; he is a threat every time he’s on the ice. He creates offensive chances for his linemates by being hard on the puck, and he’s a very good shooter. His line is very effective at taking the puck to the net where Trygve excels.” First Nations Drum also spoke to the shy 6’3” forward. “I thought I played a good physical game and made sure to let Vancouver know that they can’t mess with us,” he said. “The first half of the final game was really tough, and we got lucky by having two of their goals disallowed.” Trygve said he was excited to get going to the Telus National Cup and will focus on being faster and getting places quicker. “My favourite player is Evegeni Malkin of the Pittsburgh Penguins, and if I had to choice in team I would like one day like to play for, it would be the Montreal Canadiens because they have a winning history and every year they have a chance at winning the cup, and it’s such a nice city.” Trygve will play with the Regina Pats in the WHL Junior Hockey next season and plans to go all the way to professional hockey.

Since 1974, the best minor hockey teams in the country have competed for Canada’s National Midget Championships. The list of Telus Cup alumni includes names like Sidney Crosby, Patrick Roy, Ron Francis, and Steve Yzerman. Coach MacDonald says this will be the Bisons’ first trip to the Telus Cup, and he know his players must play very hard because all the teams are champions from their leagues. “Since we’re representing Alberta, we know that Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Quebec are usually in the medals, so we have that history to defend.” The Strathmore UFA Bisons schedule includes Team Quebec (April 20), Quebec host team (April 21), Regina Pat Canadians (April 22), Team Atlantic (April 23), Toronto Young Nationals (April 24), and the Telus playoffs April 25-26.

TELUS CUP 2015 Update: The Strathmore Bisons narrowly missed the podium as they were defeated by the Regina Pat Canadians 6-3 on Sunday, April 26 in the bronze medal game. Trygve Many Guns had an assist in that medal match-up and played a solid game. Overall, Many Guns had 2 goals and 3 assists for 5 points in the National Midget Hockey Championships. Strathmore does have some consolation in being able to beat this years’ eventual Telus Cup Champions, the Toronto Young Nationals, 5-3 in the tournament’s preliminary round. Barrett Sheen and Gary Haden both led with 8 points for Strathmore.

The Toronto Young Nationals defeated Chateaguay 6-2 in the Telus Cup final, and Strathmore ended the tournament with a 3-4 win/loss record. Strathmore had a strong 4th place showing, making the Final Four. Although the last two games didn’t quite go their way, the team can be proud that out of 142 qualifying midget 3A teams across the country, they are among the best.

Blake Leggette And Victoria Henneberry Plead Guilty In Loretta Saunders’ Murder

Loretta Saunders was murdered February 2014. Her body was found near Salisbury, New Brunswick. The motive was unclear at the time, but within a month, Blake Leggette and Victoria Henneberry were arrested and charged with the crime.

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Victoria Henneberry, 28, and Blake Leggette, 25, arrive at Halifax provincial court. Photo courtesy of CBC.ca.

Loretta Saunders had been leasing an apartment to Leggette and his girlfriend. Saunders went to pick up the rent cheque and was strangled by Leggette, who also stole her car and credit cards. Leggette did not have the rent money and had planned the murder with Victoria Henneberry.

The police had enough proof to send both Leggette and Henneberry to jail for life. The confession was not a surprise; it came as a result of handwritten description of the murder found in Leggette’s jail cell. Leggette stated it was for his lawyer, but Darcy Kory, who was sharing the same cell with Leggette, testified that Leggette’s notes were meant for a book he was writing. There is also mention in the manuscript of a book deal for Leggette, who had intended to place most of the blame on his girlfriend.

The accused will be sentenced on April 28th. It is doubtful the confession will change the sentence—premeditated murder is a life sentence. The question that begs to be asked is why murder someone over rent money? Did the fact that Loretta was Native enter the equation or were Leggette and his girlfriend mentally challenged? Murdering your landlord as a solution seems more than extreme.

During the trial, Loretta Saunders’ uncle tried to attack the defendants but was restrained by police. Loretta’s mother Miriam remained stoic, even though a year passed since her daughter’s body was found. She told CBC, “They don’t know what I’m like every morning and every night. When they took my daughter, they took a big piece of my heart.”

Toxic Fuel Spill in Vancouver’s English Bay

The city of Vancouver and the surrounding waters of English Bay, Burrard Inlet, and the Straight of Georgia are on the unceded Coast Salish territory of the Musqueam, Squamish, and Tsleil-Waututh First Nations. Investigators have confirmed the grain ship Marathassa was the source of the 2,700 litres of Bunker C Fuel that spilled into Vancouver’s English Bay on April 8th, 2015. A sailor first reported an oil slick to Port Metro Vancouver at about 5 p.m. The industry-funded Western Canada Marine Response Corp. was not called until 8 p.m., and it took four hours to establish a boom around the grain ship. City officials were not informed of the slick until 6 a.m. the next day, 13 hours after the spill.

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The oil slick on the shores of Vancouver’s beaches does not go unnoticed. Photo courtesy of [travelweek.ca].

Vancouver Mayor Gregor Robertson initially criticized the Coast Guard and their response times, calling efforts “totally inadequate.” He said, “The citizens of Vancouver are very frustrated. We don’t know what the total impact will be on our environment. We don’t know how much of that toxic substance sunk to the bottom and will be a long-term hazard in our waters.” Mayor Robertson softened his stance days later. Speaking at a news conference, Robertson admitted he’s happy with the work that’s been done so far. “The mistakes and gaps happened early on, and there’s been a big improvement since then,” he said. “It’s good to see that there’s been a strong response these last two days on the clean-up side. Crews have been in action. I don’t think we see any signs in the water of the oil spill.” Robertson reiterated that Vancouver residents deserved to know about the spill and the response to it in “real time.”

BC Premier Christy Clark blasted the Coast Guard’s response to the oil spill, saying the six hour delay in placing booms around the leaking tanker and the 13 hour delay notifying the city showed a shortage of “good judgment” and “nimbleness.” Clark said she felt it may be time for the Canadian Coast Guard to hand over the responsibility for leading the organization of oil-spill cleanups to the BC government. “Somebody needs to do a better job of protecting the coast, and the Coast Guard has not done it,” she said. “If that means that in the future the Coast Guard is relieved of their lead in this and starts taking direction from the province, then perhaps that’s a better way to do it, because we have a lot of experience, as you know, in working in a unified way.”

University of BC Fisheries Centre professor Rashid Sumaila (also an ocean and environmental specialist) explained in the Vancouver Sun that the response to the bunker oil spill in English Bay falls short of the world-class standards that Canadians expected. “This is such a disappointment,” said Sumaila. “Clearly not world-class.”

“What really hits me is that happens in the heat of the debate,” Sumaila says. “I thought they’d be much more prepared and the shipping companies would be extremely cautious not to let this happen. For me, this is a huge shock, actually. Getting to a spill quickly must be a priority in order to minimize the potential for the pollutant to spread and sink, which hinders collection. The lesson is that spills do, can, and will happen. Technology plays a great role, but it can’t completely solve the problem. It only goes so far.”

A significant contributing factor to the long response time is the federal government’s closure of the Coast Guard station in Vancouver in 2012. Had the station remained open, the response to the spill may have taken as few as six minutes. The Port of Metro Vancouver is Canada’s busiest port, but the nearest Coast Guard station is currently an hour away, south of the city. The Liberals say Harper’s marine safety cuts are putting BC’s economy and environment at risk and that a Liberal government will re-open the Vancouver Coast Guard station. “I used to live in this neighbourhood,” said Liberal leader Justin Trudeau. “I know that any spills of this nature are of serious concern to British Columbians and all Canadians. Stephen Harper’s cuts to marine safety resources and the closure of Vancouver’s Kitsilano Coast Guard Base each undermine our ability to respond to spills like this. A new Liberal government will reopen a full-service Coast Guard station in Vancouver and reinvest in marine safety and oil spill response capacity on the BC coast.”

Opposition Leader Thomas Mulcair also said that an NDP government would also reopen the station if elected in October. Harper’s Conservatives have cut Transport Canada’s funding for marine safety programs by over 27% since 2009, decreasing response capacity even as marine traffic continues to increase through Vancouver and along the BC coast. Cuts in BC alone have resulted in closure of the Kitsilano Coast Guard station, the closure of three BC Marine Communication and Traffic Centres, and cuts to oil spill response coordination resources.

“Marine safety experts are highlighting how Stephen Harper’s closure of the Kitsilano Coast Guard base had a profoundly negative impact on response capabilities following this spill, and the consequences for Vancouver’s local waters and shorelines are deeply alarming,” said Dr. Hedy Fry, Liberal MP for Vancouver Centre. “We are incredibly thankful for the service of the first responders and crews who have worked to contain the damage, and Justin Trudeau’s commitment will help ensure that Vancouver’s economy and environment will never again be similarly put at risk.”

Lost Children Use Social Media To Locate Their Families

By Lee Waters

Daniel Frost, 46, grew up with a British accent and a busy life in the UK, but he was not born there. He was born Darin Maurice to a Metis family and adopted as an infant from North Saskatchewan. Frost learned this and much more as he began seriously looking for his birth family last year.

Growing up in the United Kingdom, Frost was known as “the little brown boy.” He was often mistaken as Spanish, Italian, or even Jewish because of his skin colour, reported APTN. His parents were open with him, and he knew he was indigenous. “Most people in Europe kind of think that First Nation or Native people are no longer around. They’re found in history books,” Frost told APTN.

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Daniel Frost, 46, reconnected with members of his biological family after over 44 years apart. Photo courtesy of [APTN.ca].

While visiting friends in Toronto in the 1990’s, Frost noticed a different reaction to his appearance. “It was the first time I experienced any kind of recognition of who I was. It was both in a good way and a bad way,” he said. Approached on the street, some asked if he was Cree. “I also had other people who were like ‘We know about your people. You’re all alcoholics,’” but he wasn’t totally dissuaded, Frost explained to APTN. “In a way, it was quite life-fulfilling, even the bad stuff, because you’re understanding who I am.”

Sometime after that trip, Frost made his first attempt to find his birth family and received a package from Saskatchewan, Canada. It included a handwritten note from his mother, addressed “my darling son.” “I was quite overwhelmed by it,” Frost told APTN. “Someone else was calling me her son.” He stopped his search and ended up losing the note in a fire. “I’m not sure I was mature enough to handle it at the time.”

When Frost started his search again, his birth parents had both died, but he found his birth sister Edna Smith, who sent him photos of his siblings. He discovered he had thirteen brothers and sisters, two of which were deceased. “Suddenly, I saw people looking back at me that looked like me. I’ve even got a brother that looks like me. It’s something that is quite extraordinary,” he told APTN.

Daniel Frost was one of thousands of indigenous children caught up in the ’60’s Scoop, displacing and separating families all across Canada. Frost’s birth sister Edna Smith was also adopted by a British family, but they stayed in Saskatchewan. “I have a sister in BC. I have a sister in Washington [State]. I have a sister in Red Deer, one in North Battleford, a brother in Saskatoon, two brothers in Calgary, a brother in Regina, a brother in Dillon and Dan,” said Smith.

Frost and Smith both used social media to find their family members, and Frost is now using the internet crowd-funding platform GoFundMe to raise funds to return to Canada and visit his birth family. Crowd-funding platforms like GoFundMe are powerful tools in connecting those in need with those who want to give, forging partnerships, and enabling projects that may otherwise have not been possible.

Frost is not the only one taking advantage of the new digital age to reunite with his lost family. Lori Campbell, Metis, spent a grueling 23 years searching for her family. It wasn’t until she used Facebook that she was able to make some real progress. According to Huffington Post, Campbell posted a photo on Facebook detailing her missing brother’s name and date of birth. “I remember always looking for someone who looked like me,” she told the Huffington Post. “There was always this sense that I was dropped in the middle of nowhere and my life began when I was two.”

Adopted by a white family, the Regina-born Metis woman was put into foster care at 14-months-old. She spent the first half of her life feeling confused and slightly out of place. While looking for her biological mother, she discovered she had seven younger siblings. Five brothers and one sister were placed in foster care or put up for adoption. Campbell keeps a large binder full of details and documents she’s gathered over the years. “This is how I know who I am,” she told Huffington Post. “This is how I know how much I weighed when I was born, what my smile was like.”

To her surprise, the social media searches have prompted a lot of other people to contact her, too. Campbell has been in touch with over 75 people also looking for their birth families and has nearly another hundred awaiting reply. “[There are] all these people who don’t know who they are,” Campbell said.

Unfortunately, over half of children under 15 in foster care are Aboriginal, one of many ramifications still affecting the Aboriginal population after the ’60’s Scoop. With some luck and perseverance, many other adopted children could reunite with their birth families through the help of social media.

Keyano College Celebrates Elsie Yanick, 98 Years Young, And Her Indspire Award

By Melissa Herman

The majority of us spend years searching for that spark that will ignite an inextinguishable flame and some… well, some see it in every leaf and log. Truth be told, we are all surrounded with an abundance of reasons to be thankful, kind and hopeful. Blessings are something rarely overlooked by someone like Elsie Yanik. At 98 years young, when asked why she practices such gracious ways in such a kind manner, she will humbly tell a story of a man who brought her and her siblings Christmas gifts on an Eve that they were sure that they had all been forgotten. It was Mrs. Yanik’s first Christmas since her mother’s passing. She was 8 years old then but the twinkle of gratitude in her eye hadn’t ceased to glow. She carried this act of kindness with her throughout her years and kept it close to her heart, so that every action she made since then was guided with the same kindness shown to her as a child.

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Indspire lifetime award recipient Elsie Yanik in her white cap and gown. Photo by Greg Ha Linda.

How long has Elsie been helping others? Well, Canada’s 20th Prime Minister Jean Chretien, now in his 80s, was new to the world when Elsie began her journey as a nurse’s aide in Fort Smith at the tender age of 17. She let kindness light the path in front of her, with the destination contently unknown. She would come to be an easily recognizable inspiration, as clear to those who’ve met her as her childhood gift bearer was to her.

If all the fuss seems so familiar to Mrs. Yanik, and indeed it is. It is because she has done this before. The Indspire award is merely the latest in a long line of recognition that she has been awarded. Among many others, she received an honorary Law Degree from the University of Alberta, not long after obtaining her honorary Aboriginal Child & Family Services Diploma from Keyano College. She was an Olympic Torch bearer for the 2010 Olympic Winter Games, the President of Voices for Aboriginal Women of Alberta, recognized by Pope John Paul II for her tireless years of service as a lay minister. In addition to all this she also spent a decade as a member of the Young Offenders Board and served the Nunee Health Authority in Fort Chipewyan. Always in her element with people of all ages, but especially young people, her presence is nevertheless humbling. Her compassion and inspirational ways of mentoring also earned her a Governor General’s Commemorative Medal and a Stars of Alberta Award.

She was 20 years old when she met her husband at late night mass. Their first date took place on a farm that would eventually lead to a honeymoon in the bush, 49 years of marriage, 4 daughters, 1 son and 12 grandchildren. Mrs. Yanik admits that she never bothered to travel the world until her husband passed away in 1986.She had no need to. Alone however, she found time to explore Europe and paid a visit to Hong Kong among other places.

Today, Mrs. Yanik continues to show how far a little kindness can go and the profound depths of the simplest actions. For that reason she is being recognized yet again, this time with an Indspire Lifetime Achievement Award. Keyano College would like to extend a much deserved congratulations, and commend you for years of compassionate deeds.

 

2015 Indspire Awards Celebrate in Calgary

Culturally, the indigenous community encourages progression through taking the time to honour those who have taken the initiative to build their community. In the far past, members of a tribe – men, women, children, elders – would gather around the glow of a fire, celebrating the individuals that have enriched the livelihood of their community with their bravery, passion, spirit, knowledge, strength, innovation, creativity, their everything. And they would feast and they would dance and they would listen to their brothers and sisters tell stories of their triumphs, encouraging others to go out and fulfil their own triumphs. The fast-paced progression of our immediate society can sometimes make people forget about this type of acknowledgement. Could it still exist? Of course, and it does.

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Santee Smith Onkwehon performs “We Woman from the Mohawk Nation.”

Establishing itself in 1993, the Indspire Awards has been ardent in bringing this mode of recognition back to life, and they have been for the past twenty-two years. Indspire takes the time to recognize fourteen certain individuals who have worked hard to progress the indigenous community, including three outstanding youths. This year, the Indspire Awards was held on the last Friday of February in the traditional territory of the Blackfoot people of Treaty No. 7: Calgary, Alberta. Inviting exceptional indigenous talent and leaders to tell stories of their upbringing, pursuits, and initiatives, the night encouraged and inspired those who gave an ear to listen.

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Tanya Tagaq performing at the Indspire Awards in Calgary, February 27.

Starting off the night with an explosion of raw, traditional dancing from the Kahurangi Maori Dance Theatre, the stage lit up with a fervour of grand lighting fixtures and feather mixtures harmonizing with live traditional drumming and singing. Welcoming the audience to the Indspire reception, Roberta Jamieson, along with comic relief from hosts Lorne Cardinal and Kyle Nobess, began the pace of the evening by inviting the award recipients and performers to share stories of their accomplishments and future endeavours.

Of these, First Nations Drum got a chance to speak with a couple of the individuals involved, starting with recipient of the Art Indspire award, Ron E. Scott.

“For me, it is very humbling to receive an Indspire award,” expresses Scott. “I’m so appreciative of the opportunity to be included with the other recipients this year and in the past, because I feel that their achievements are so incredible.” Founder, president, and executive producer of Prairie Dog Film and Television, Scott has become a prominent member of the indigenous film and television community, specifically for his APTN on-going television series Blackstone. Being a member of the Aboriginal Filmmakers Program at the National Film Board, Scott invests his time and energy into training Indigenous people on the sets of his shows, introducing them to the ways of the film and television industry.

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Lorne Cardinal & Kyle Nobess MC the award show.

“In Canada, there is a lot of opportunity for indigenous people, especially in the arts, whether it be the visual arts, music, or film and TV,” says Scott. “What I’ve seen with TV and film production, within the indigenous community, the quality has risen every year. It’s a progression not only in crew, but in writers, directors, and producers, and we’re seeing some projects that are competing with other non-indigenous film and TV shows.”

Also showcasing indigenous engagement in the film and television industry was comic host of The Candy Show on APTN Candy Palmater, co-hosts Cardinal and Nobess, youth reporter and founder of Konek Productions Jordan Konek, as well as actor Tahmoh Penikett, who shared a couple words with First Nations Drum.

“Most First Nations across Canada and North America, as diverse as they are, are incredibly artistic,” articulates Penikett. “It’s how we tell our stories. It’s about the world, the tradition, the music, and the art – it’s in our blood, it’s in everyone’s blood.” Penikett has made a name for himself as an actor in films such as Man of Steel and his most recent role in the series Supernatural. Discussing with him, he spoke about his interest in being involved with more indigenous centred films. “I take on roles that tell a great story, because the way a story a told is so important. A lot of the stories I grew up with came from my grandmother, and these are the kind of stories I want to bring to the screen.”

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Crystal Lightning performs “Redcloud” to a welcoming crowd.

This day-in-age, where everything seems to be moving at such a rapid pace, telling stories around a campfire seems to be a tradition of the past. Bringing indigenous stories to the screen, however, is a way the nation can bridge the gap of cultural misunderstanding. “Unfortunately we’re underrepresented in film and television today, and there needs to be more First Nations actors out there, and more material that is about our stories,” states Penikett, and isn’t it the truth? There is an evident need in the film industry for stories scribed from the pens of First Nations story-tellers, portrayed by First Nation people, and given to the global audience. Why? Well, in order to dispel any misrepresentation indigenous people have encountered in the past, and still do today. “We’re at a time in this era where we have access to the web and the internet, and so now we can grab a camera and film a story on little to no budget, we just need more First Nations people bringing their ideas towards this type of communication,” states Petikett.

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Dancer addresses the crowd.

The uniqueness of the First Nation culture is particular to the worldviews cultivated during ones upbringing. In an age where most kids have a better relationship with their cell-phone than with their own parents, it’s a reprieve to see views from individuals that grew up focused on family ties, respect for the land, and a realization that technology is not something that controls you, rather, technology is something to take control of.

Other than hearing award recipients share their stories, the night was also filled with performances ranging from performances from hip-hop duo Lightning Cloud, Moari vocalist Pieter T, R&B singer/songwriters Dani & Lizzy, as well as mulch-instrumentalist and singer Niiko Soul. Of all showcases, the most unique performance of the night had to come from Inuk throat-singer Tanya Tagaq. Displaying traditional Inuit attire, dancing, and unique singing, Tagaq resounded the room with primitive ritual, bringing the entire audience back to their indigenous roots.

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2015 Indspire Recipients

Of the fourteen recipients, the other thirteen Indspire awards went to: Elsie Yanik (Lifetime Achievement), Brenda LaRose (Business & Commerce), Piita (Peter) Irniq (Culture, Heritage & Spirituality), Dr. Paulette C. Tremblay (Education), Gerald Anderson (Environment & Natural Resources), William Julius Mussell (Health), Dr. Wilton Littlechild (Law & Justice), Kim Baird (Politics), Madeleine (Public Service), Gino Odjick (Sports), Kendal Netmaker (Youth – First Nation), Jordan Konek (Youth – Inuit), Gabrielle Fayant (Youth – Métis).

 

Nominations for the 2016 Indspire Awards are now open. If you find a particular educator within your indigenous community reaching above and beyond to progress and educate people on their culture, why not nominate them? It’s easy to do, check it out on their website at indspire.ca. If you can’t think of anyone, why not make yourself that particular educator? Aspire to be who Indspire gives recognition to. You’ll be recognized by your community regardless, and perhaps even nominated to be a future recipient of a Indspire award.